2009
DOI: 10.1890/08-1074.1
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Alpha and beta diversity of plants and animals along a tropical land‐use gradient

Abstract: Assessing the overall biological diversity of tropical rain forests is a seemingly insurmountable task for ecologists. Therefore, researchers frequently sample selected taxa that they believe reflect general biodiversity patterns. Usually, these studies focus on the congruence of α diversity (the number of species found per sampling unit) between taxa rather than on β diversity (turnover of species assemblages between sampling units). Such approaches ignore the potential role of habitat heterogeneity that, dep… Show more

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Cited by 126 publications
(120 citation statements)
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“…When human impacts are patchy in space, beta-diversity is likely to increase at the 135 landscape scale [47,48]. However, human activities often generate completely novel landscapes, with unpredictable changes to alpha-, beta-, and gamma-diversity.…”
Section: How Humans Have Impacted Beta-diversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When human impacts are patchy in space, beta-diversity is likely to increase at the 135 landscape scale [47,48]. However, human activities often generate completely novel landscapes, with unpredictable changes to alpha-, beta-, and gamma-diversity.…”
Section: How Humans Have Impacted Beta-diversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The surroundings of the national park are inhabited by more than 40,000 people who mainly live from agriculture and harvesting of non-timber forest products (The Nature Conservancy 2001, park profile). The margins of the park are characterized by a mosaic of near-primary forests, secondary forests, forest gardens and small cacao, coffee, maize and paddy rice farms (Kessler et al , 2009. Despite designation as national park, much of the forest is subject to uncontrolled extraction of forest resources, particularly rattan (Siebert 2001).…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Quantifying distribution patterns, in turn, demands robust and reproducible field survey protocols for a range of different species (Lobo et al 2010). Important variables in this context include patterns of local species richness (Yoccoz et al 2001), species turnover (Tylianakis et al 2005;Kessler et al 2009), and species composition (Klimek et al 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%